Tidewater Portland Cement Co. v. Lincoln

120 A. 365, 142 Md. 193, 1923 Md. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 A. 365 (Tidewater Portland Cement Co. v. Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tidewater Portland Cement Co. v. Lincoln, 120 A. 365, 142 Md. 193, 1923 Md. LEXIS 11 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Tidewater Portland Cement Company, the appellant in this case, is engaged in the manufacture of cement at Union Bridge in Carroll County, Maryland, and the appellee, trading as the National Mortar Company, is a dealer in cement operating in the City of Washington. On January 27, 1916, in continuance of previous relations of the same nature, a contract was executed by which it was agreed that the appellee should purchase from the appellant fifty thousand barrels of cement between the date of the contract and the *195 end of the current calendar year, in quantities; not exceeding ten thousand barrels in any month. Tt was stipulated that the purchases of cement, thus agreed to he made, should he “at the market price, in carload lots, prevailing” in the territory covered hy the contract, “at the time each order for cement” was “placed by the buyer with the seller.” Article 11 of the agreement provided: “That the territory covered hy this contract is the District of Columbia, in which territory the buyer has the exclusive right to the sale of Tidewater Portland Cement during the life of this contract.” On January 28, 1916, the appellant wrote the appellee a letter stating: “With further reference to contract, entered into between the National Mortar Company and the Tidewater Portland Cement Company, dated the 27th day of January, 1916, and with particular reference to Article 11 of said contract, it is hereby mutually agreed and understood that should at any time the Tidewater Portland Cement Company desire to sell cement in said territory, that they may do so without violating any of the terms or conditions of this contract, upon payment hy the Tidewater Portland Cement Company to the National Mortar Company of a commission of fifteen cents, per barrel.” Ppon this, letter was noted the appellee’s acceptance.

Por the year 1917 a sales agreement was executed in substantially the same form, so far as the questions here involved are concerned, as the one applying to the prior annual period. "By notation of both parties upon the letter just quoted its terms were “extended to cover the year 1917.” The transactions between them in respect to the sale of cement continued until the midsummer of 1918, but without the execution of a sales contract for that year. At the time of the severance of their trade relations, the appellee was indebted to the appellant in an amount conceded at the trial below to he $32,205.90, for cement and unretumed sacks. Payments had been withheld hy the appellee, to- the total amount stated, because of his larger claims for commissions, under the terms of the letter referred to, and for damages resulting from the *196 alleged breach by the appellant of its agreements with the appellee for the sale and delivery of cement. The pending suit was brought by the appellant, and it has been contested solely upon the basis of the appellee’s counter-claims, which were asserted by appropriate pleas. The appeal is from a judgment for $10,000 rendered in the appellee’s favor in pursuance of the verdict of a .jury. This result was equivalent to a recovery in the sum of $42,205.90, as the judgment was for an amount demanded by the appellee in excess of that admitted to be due the appellant.

The most interesting and important of the questions raised by the numerous exceptions in the record depend for decision •upon the construction and application of 'the agreement relating to commissions on sales made by the appellant, in derogation of the appellee’s exclusive selling rights, in the District of Columbia. All of the sales upon which the commissions are claimed were made by the appellant to the Government of the United 'States. A large proportion of the cement thus seld was delivered and. used beyond the territory to which the appellee’s contractual right of sale was limited. The whole of the material supplied by the appellant to the Government was ordered and required for purposes essential to the prosecution of the war with Germany. "When the commission agreement upon which the appellee relies -was entered into the nation was at peace. Every one of the transactions to which the commission claim refers was produced by the exigencies of war. The primary and decisive inquiry is whether the agreement is applicable to the subsequently developed and abnormal conditions with respect to which it is sought, to be enforced.

The National Defence Act, of June 3rd, 1916 (Comp. St. S. 3115 g), authorized the President, in time of actual or imminent war, to place orders, through the head of any department of the Government, for such products, or material as might be required. It was provided that compliance with such orders should be obligatory, and that they should take precedence over all other orders or contracts. A similar *197 provision was contained in the Navy Purchase Act of March 4th, 1917 (39 St. at L., 1193). By the Urgent Deficiency Act, of June 15, 1917 (U. S'. St. at L., vol. 40, pt. 1, e. 29, p. 182), it was provided that “the owner or occupier of any plant in which ships or materials are built or produced” could be. required “to place at tbe disposal of the United States the whole or any part of the output of such plant, to deliver such output or part thereof in such quantities and at such times as may be specified in the order,” and that compliance with an order issued under the act should be obligatory upon any person to whom it was given, and any such order should “take precedence over all other orders and contracts placed wfith such person.” The act further declared that if any person owning or operating a plant equipped for the production of material should refuse or fail to comply with an order1 thereby authorized, or to give preference to the United States in its execution, or should refuse to supply or manufacture the kind and quantities of materials ordered, at such reasonable prices as should be determined by tbe President, immediate possession of the whole or a part of such plant or material might be taken by him for use at such times and in such manner as he might consider necessary or expedient.

The deliveries of cement by the appellant to the Government were in fulfillment of orders; and contracts resulting from allocations of such material made by the Portland Cement Committee, one of the agencies organized by the Council of XTational Defense in the exercise of its authority to provide “in time of need” for “the immediate concentration and utilization of the resources of the XTation.” (U. S. St. at Tj., vol. 39, c. 418, S. 2 p.. 649.) Cement was required in, large quantities for various construction purposes essential to the government’s war measures. The plant of the appellant was so located as to he one of the most convenient sources of supply for a number of highly important military projects. The quantities of cement furnished by the appellant for such purposes aggregated 277,534 barrels.

*198 When cement was needed for a particular project the Government would apply to the Portland Cement Committee, which would report a® to the district and plant where it should be obtained. The order would then be placed by the agency requiring the material. The prices were determined by the Federal Trade Commission and were lower than the prevailing 'commercial rates.

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120 A. 365, 142 Md. 193, 1923 Md. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidewater-portland-cement-co-v-lincoln-md-1923.